Actually, according to howlongtobeat.com, completionists can spend more than 200 hours working through the game’s plethora of quests, discovering its secrets and seeing everything that Bethesda’s RGP masterpiece has to offer. Skyrim wasn’t a game that put quantity above quality either, as most quests where well designed and rewarding, while the game’s beautiful world was a sight to behold.

And since Skyrim is such a vast game with so much to offer players, perhaps some gamers are already dreaming up excuses to skip work or school and stay at home playing this great RPG… And luckily Bethesda’s vice president Pete Hines has decided to help these gamers out by tweeting a fake doctor’s letter, in which the fictional Dr. Agon Born states that the patient has been “diagnosed with Nirnroot exposure” and must stay at home to rest (or rather to play Skyrim…).

In case you don't have the day(s) off and need an excuse to stay home and play Skyrim SE, Uncle Pete has you covered. pic.twitter.com/BHtjoFHCdV

Those new to the Elder Scrolls universe might not know that Nirnroot is one of the plants players can collect in the game and use to create potions (and was the subject of a quest in Skyrim’s predecessor Oblivion), but even if this fake letter does not serve as an excuse to stay at home playing Skyrim Special Edition, here’s hoping those who purchase the remaster end up spending plenty of quality time with it all the same.

Note: The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Special Edition will be released on October 28, 2016. Available on PS4, Xbox One and PC.